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Ukraine war
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Moscow accuses Germany of ‘Russophobic hysteria’ on date of Hitler’s invasion – while pounding Ukraine

  • ‘The anti-Russian propaganda campaign’ has provoked ‘unmotivated aggression bordering on mass psychosis’ against Russians in Germany, foreign ministry said
  • June 22 is a significant date in Russia, Ukraine and Belarus, marking when Hitler’s Nazi forces invaded the Soviet Union in 1941

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Russian President Vladimir Putin lays flowers at a memorial to mark the anniversary of Hitler’s Nazi forces invading the Soviet Union in 1941. Photo: Reuters
Reuters

Russia on Wednesday accused Germany of anti-Russian sentiment in a statement on the anniversary of the invasion of the Soviet Union by Nazi troops in 1941 as tensions rage over Ukraine.

“Russophobic hysteria is systematically fuelled by almost daily public attacks against our country by members of the German government,” Russia’s foreign ministry said.

It said authorities in Berlin “have recently been undermining the process of historical reconciliation between Russians and Germans” after World War II.

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Berlin “jeopardises the results of the efforts made by Russia and Germany for decades to overcome post-war enmity, hostility and distrust between the peoples of our countries”, the ministry said.

It said “the anti-Russian propaganda campaign” has provoked “unmotivated aggression bordering on mass psychosis” against Russians and Russian speakers in Germany.

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The ministry also accused Nato member Germany of building up its military presence near Russia’s Western borders, “bringing to mind the most bitter periods of Russian-German relations for our people, including the events preceding May 1945”.

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